Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Welcome to the no
Wine Left Behind podcast, where
we truly leave no wine behind.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
I'm Alex and I'm
Celia.
We are here in the studiotogether, sharing ups and downs,
frustrations and funny momentsof our daily adventures.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
So grab your favorite
glass join us as we raise our
voices.
Together, we'll dive into thedrama of life as we see it.
All right and we're back.
Hello, we're doing it again.
Here we are again.
Um, I have made the transitionofficially, because I've been
(00:43):
been saying this for a coupledays, maybe a couple weeks now,
talking a lot of shit, but Ihave officially made the
transition from espressomartinis to margaritas.
It is margarita season, bitchesGet out of here.
No more espresso martinis forme.
I'm taking a break.
Speaker 2 (01:03):
They're good for
after does, after dinner, like
dessert drink for me, like allyear round people who drink them
like as a regular drink anddrink multiple of them.
I wish I could do that, becausethey are delicious, yes, but at
the same time they're filling,yes.
So, like I don't know if peoplecan drink two, three and four
(01:25):
espresso martinis, because Idrink two and I'm bloated Like
I'm, I can't, like, I can't asmuch as I want to.
I literally can't.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Yeah, they're so
thick, it's crazy.
Yeah, yeah.
And I don't know, maybe it'sjust because I had so many over,
like the fall and winter, thatI just many over like the fall
and winter that I just I can'tbring it into spring and summer,
I just can't.
Speaker 2 (01:51):
So I'm the opposite.
I try to keep it very minimal.
On the espresso martinibeverage.
I always try to keep it as likea dessert drink, like yeah,
that's not, like I'm not theperson that sits down at the
table and my first drink is anespresso martini Because I won't
eat my dinner.
Like I won't eat my dinner,I'll be full.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Yeah, no, I can't.
That's my first drink.
That's the reason why I go tothe restaurant, not even for the
fucking food at this point.
Oh, my word.
Maybe that's another reason whyI'm giving it up.
I'm becoming addicted.
It's a problem.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Yeah, they can be
addicting.
They are good they're so good.
When people do them chocolatemartinis or the chocolate
espresso, they'd be gettingcrazy with them.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
There are so many
different kinds.
Now it's insane.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
Yes, there are a lot
of variations of espresso
martinis.
Now, it's ridiculous 's yourfavorite um local place to get
them um, I'm gonna say, probablysurf in nashua, yeah, okay,
okay, I'm gonna tell you rightnow I've never, ever gotten a
(02:58):
bad drink there yeah like when Iget my dirty martinis they're
literally perfect, like exactlythe amount of dirty that I like,
like they're not too dirty,they're not dirty and they're
not like it's just I love it.
So they do make real they havegood bartenders there, like they
(03:20):
make really good drinks theretheir food is great too, like
that restaurant overall isamazing.
Yeah, I go wrong I would sayyeah, I would say there I agree
but yeah, I don't know.
I know what I was gonna say.
I just speaking of espressomartinis.
I just saw a recipe onlineyesterday for a guinness
(03:44):
espresso martini using guinness,that's definitely filling.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
That's crazy yeah,
yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
So I was like okay,
this is again another variation.
Speaker 1 (03:56):
Where was that recipe
on saint patrick's day?
Speaker 2 (03:59):
right, that would
have been perfect.
And then throw some green dyein there, try to make it green,
I don't know.
No, maybe the rim, maybe dosomething with the green and,
you know, make it like I don'tknow.
Speaker 1 (04:10):
Don't do it to me,
it's fine.
No, no, we're not putting greenin Guinness, it's gross.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
Well, I know, because
it's dark and you wouldn't see
the green, but you'd have to putit like around the rim of the
glass or maybe like a greenstirrup.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
I envision, like the
foam being green.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
Oh yeah, yeah, Like,
yeah, yeah Like.
Right now, Starbucks has thislavender matcha drink and the
foam is purple like lilac, oh,that's pretty.
It's pretty because the matchais green, the foam is lilac.
It's a very pretty drink.
I don't think I'd necessarilylike it, because I don't like
(04:47):
matcha and I don't like anythingwith lavender, but it looks
really nice.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
So funny.
Yeah, I don't like matchaeither.
People are crazy over that shit.
I don't like matcha.
Speaker 2 (05:02):
It just tastes like
milk Milk with a hint of it's.
It's just the weirdest taste,like it doesn't taste like
anything really.
It's like yeah yeah yeah,matcha's, not my jam.
No, same, same, but I don'tknow.
(05:22):
I guess the trick with matchais the more matcha you add, like
the more powder, the moreflavor you get.
I believe that's the, that'sthe trick with the matcha,
because we make it here and itsays, it tells you like to add
more if you want to like a moreof a robust, interesting I don't
know.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
Can you like od on
matcha?
I don't know, is there you likeOD on matcha?
I don't know, is there such athing as too much matcha, too
much matcha, yeah yeah.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
Yeah, and now you
look like you're drinking like a
cup full of slime.
I don't know, Because I meanthe more matcha you add, the
greener it gets right.
That's so gross.
So, yeah, no, that's that's.
Yeah, that's nasty.
I'm soon.
No, so I want to talk aboutmagnesium okay magnesium has my
(06:09):
fucking brain twisted, okay,because so.
Okay, I hear and read a lotabout magnesium.
I hear it's fucking awesome foryou, for sleep and for brain
function and for muscle andjoints, and bop, bop, bop, bop
(06:31):
bop yeah.
But so I was talking to acoworker the other day and she's
like, oh, I take magnesium tosleep and for this, that and the
other thing, but she takes likea multi one.
And I'm like, oh, so there's amulti.
Like there's a multi.
She's like, oh, yeah, she goesthis different ones.
And I'm like, wait what?
Yeah, hold on, hold on, hold on.
I'm like, what do you mean?
(06:52):
There's all different ones.
I'm like this is my problem,dude.
I fucking went on.
So now I'm like I'm intrigued.
I'm like, okay, I need to knowwhat the fuck is up like.
What is this?
What is this magnesium likethis, this magnesium Like this,
this magic?
And why is there so manyfucking different ones?
Because it's not magic.
But everyone says magnesium isgood from.
(07:13):
They say it's good foreverything.
Like it's, it's one of the bestthings.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
You can put in your
body.
So I'm like, okay, differentones serve different functions
and they're fucking confusing.
Yes, I thought differentfunctions and they're fucking
confusing.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
Yes, I thought
magnesium was like taking a
fucking vitamin c no, no, youtake fucking magnesium, no, so I
get online, girl.
I think there's like a hundredvariations of fucking magnesium
yes, and there's magnesium infood.
There's powder magnesium.
There's pill magnesium.
There's liquid magnesium.
Yes, what the pill magnesiumthere's?
Liquid magnesium yes, what thefuck.
How do I know what magnesium tofucking take?
(07:49):
Because there's like a hundredfucking variations of magnesium.
Speaker 1 (07:53):
Ask your doctor, ask
a professional.
Speaker 2 (07:56):
Oh my God.
So now I'm like clickingmagnesium citrate.
Okay, what's that for?
Oh, I like that Magnesium, thatmagnesium melon, la, la, la,
okay yeah that sounds good.
So now I I find like the threethat I feel like I want, some
for brain health, for sleep andfor muscle like to.
(08:16):
Yeah, you know, you know, helpmust muscles.
Okay, I can't find a fuckingbottle of magnesium that has the
three that I want.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
Well then, you're
going to have to get multiple
bottles.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
Oh, fuck that.
I can't even keep up with thefucking medication I take now,
and now I got to add three pillsto my day.
Get out of here.
I guess, so, so yeah, that'swhat it boils down to.
So my plan was I want to takemagnesium so desperately, like
you have no idea, because I hearit's just fucking amazing yeah
so, but I don't know which oneto take.
(08:52):
So I'm not taking it right nowcurrently, and I set up an
appointment for a physical, sonow I'm waiting.
Like I'm anxiously waiting.
I like I literally don't evencare about this.
Like I know I gotta get aphysical every year.
I know I got to get a physicalevery year.
I'm not excited about getting aphysical every year.
It is what it is.
This is the first time I'veever been excited about going to
see my doctor and getting aphysical, because I need to know
(09:14):
what type of magnesium to take.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
It's important, yeah,
and the sooner the better.
It's crazy.
It's like taking its effect.
Speaker 2 (09:23):
My mind is literally
blown.
I'm listen.
Every whoever listens is likeis she a fucking dipshit or what
I had?
No idea that there was multipletypes of magnesium.
I knew there was magnesium infood and I knew there was
magnesium liquid, because I'veseen the liquid, yeah, of
magnesia is something it'scalled, right, I don't know,
maybe that's something else, I'mnot sure but and it's like
(09:45):
white and chalky.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
Yeah, I'm sure
there's something like that too.
Speaker 2 (09:49):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (09:49):
It sounds familiar.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
So, but I didn't
realize there was like all these
different variations and thegirl's like oh yeah.
And she's looking at me like Ican no idea.
I learn something new every day.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
No, I went down that
same rabbit hole because I too
wanted it to help me sleep, andthen that's when I realized
there were so many of them.
I got overwhelmed and was like,fuck this, I'll just not sleep.
I got so overwhelmed that Ididn't even like try to figure
it out anymore.
And there's so many brands.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
Yes, there's so many
I don't know.
So what I did was I put threedifferent ones in my Amazon cart
and after I see my doctor I'mgoing to be like, okay, which
one of these do I take?
Do I have to take all three?
Like help?
Speaker 1 (10:37):
me.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
I literally can't
wait to take magnesium, and it
fucking better help, becauselike this has been driving me
crazy for like two weeks now.
I see my doctor for another twoweeks, so that's gonna be a
whole month on magnesium,thinking about magnesium.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
It'll be worth the
wait.
Once you figure out the rightone, I think it'll be worth the
wait.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
So you should just
take one for sleeping.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
Yeah, let me know
which one that is.
Can you ask your fucking doctorlisten?
Speaker 2 (11:11):
I have no idea so
many next episode I hopefully
will have a solution and I willhave my system and better sleep,
better muscle whatever andbetter fucking brain power.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
So I'm excited.
I'm excited for the journey foryou, yeah yeah, I can't fucking
wait.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
I literally can't
fucking wait.
I literally can't fucking wait.
And we're going to talk aboutweight loss too, by the way.
Me and my doctor will have achat Boy.
I am just not feeling good.
Speaker 1 (11:52):
Yeah, it's tough.
Man, Getting old is tough Falland winter and when it's cold
it's tough.
You pack on the pounds and thenit's just like it's too much
and then the nice weather comesand you feel uncomfortable.
Oh gee hi and then everyonearound us is on fucking ozempic,
wagovi or manjaro, fuckingeveryone.
Speaker 2 (12:15):
I met everyone I met
a woman yesterday.
She was on Zepro.
Oh, it's your Zepatide.
No, zepro, zepro, zepron, zepro, something like that.
Speaker 1 (12:27):
That might be like a
semi-glutide, that's like the
derivative of the originals.
Oh, look at you and your bigfancy words.
Yeah Well, hey, I was trying tolook for a cost-effective
option, and even the cheap onesare fucking expensive for me, so
I think it's that bound thatbound.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
Yeah, that's right.
But she said she's been on itfor like a year, she goes.
Oh, that's one of the firstones that came out.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
She goes now I take
it every, maybe once a month, as
a preventative, that's crazy.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
I felt like saying so
, do you have any extra hanging
around?
I'll take those.
You can keep your one month,the one you need for the month,
I'll take the rest.
Everyone, everyone is on somesort of something.
Yeah, yeah, I mean I don't wantto, I don't want to get on one
of those things, but, like, ifthere's something else you can
recommend that can help me, justkind of like, get me started,
(13:14):
right, I don't need to be onsomething like long-term, I just
need something to kind of giveme that jumpstart, right, you
know what I mean, and once I getthat jumpstart, I know I'll be,
I can be fine and do it on myown.
Yeah, I just need a little, youknow, a little push.
Yeah, I'm hoping there'ssomething she can suggest to
help me.
I mean, besides diet andexercise, because you know and
(13:36):
stop drinking, like I alreadyknow that I need something now.
Speaker 1 (13:41):
Yeah, stop drinking
like I already know that I need
something now.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
Yeah, worst advice
ever like top three things I
don't want to fucking hear yeahor that.
I know, don't tell me any typediet exercise.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
I already know that
and this is too like, and I feel
the same way for you.
I don't want to speak for you,but I feel like we're similar in
a sense that, like we don't eatbad, no, we don't like.
Drink a ton, we don't like.
True.
Could I be more active?
Yes, absolutely, but I'm alsonot inactive, like I'm fucking
(14:10):
out and about all day long, likeI'm always doing shit.
Yeah, so when I hear thingslike diet and exercise and blah,
blah blah, it's like okay, butlike do you want me to be like a
fucking bodybuilder?
Like I'm not doing that?
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Right, yeah,
definitely.
I definitely eat pretty decent.
I definitely could use moreexercise.
I'm definitely not giving upthe alcohol, so there's got to
be something like a.
There's got to be a happymedium somewhere in between all
that.
Speaker 1 (14:35):
So, so yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:37):
I don't either.
It's just getting old.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
That's all it is.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
Yeah, yeah.
And then you're getting gainingweight and like these weird
awkward goofy places that itjust is uncomfortable.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
So I'm not.
Speaker 2 (14:48):
I'm not sitting here
saying, oh, I feel like I'm fat
because I'm not, but I'muncomfortable.
Speaker 1 (14:53):
I'm uncomfortable.
Speaker 2 (14:54):
When I put my jeans
on they'll snug around my waist
and I go to sit down and it'slike tight.
You know what I mean.
And I don't want to just changemore pants and different sizes.
I want to, like, just fit intowhat I have and be comfortable,
right?
Yeah, you know, and I believeme, none of my clothes are like
a size four, so it's not likeI'm trying to do that either,
you know, just trying to fitinto my clothes.
I don't need a new wardrobethat's it, yep, yep like if I
(15:19):
lost 10 pounds, I'd be fine.
Yeah, like I literally would befine.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
Mm, hmm, so I'm not
trying to lose, like pounds.
Speaker 2 (15:28):
I'm not trying to do
all that.
Speaker 1 (15:29):
No, gosh, no, yeah,
that's crazy.
Yeah, not needed over here.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
Anywho.
So that's that's what I'm doingright now.
It's my focus.
We got that and some littlekickstart to my weight loss.
We got this.
Um yeah, I'm like even thestuff that I drink now.
I try not to drink beer.
I try to drink low, low caloriealcoholic beverages.
(15:57):
I try not to drink anyalcoholic beverages.
I take a few days off inbetween, the weekend.
You know I drink a lot of water.
So I'm doing all the rightthings, same, but I think I need
to be more active.
I don't even think it's that.
I really think, like you said,it's age and then it's harder
for you to get the weight off,no matter how hard you work out
(16:18):
or whatever, how many times aday you exercise, it's just
harder as you get older.
So that's why I feel like I'm ata point in my life where I need
a kickstart.
I need something.
I need like connect the jump ofcables and give me a fucking
jumpstart.
That's what I mean, shock me.
I need something.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
I love that.
That's so funny.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
Anyways.
So I have a new celebrityperson that I literally want to
help free, and she's closeenough where I can go and be a
supporter if I ever wanted toreally get in the weeds here are
(17:07):
we talking about karen reed?
No um karen reed's a celebritybecause of her murder trial
someone close.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
Are you talking about
wendy williams?
Speaker 2 (17:17):
I am talking about my
girl wendy.
I am obsessed with wendywilliams like I need to help her
.
I need to find a way to contacther and be like girl, I am here
, I am, I'm supporting you like.
(17:38):
I want you free girl.
I want you to have your lifeback.
Speaker 1 (17:43):
When did this start?
How did this happen?
Speaker 2 (17:45):
because, like so
obviously her, she like went off
the air just out of the blueand then, like for a long time
you didn't see nothing aboutwendy williams.
And then all these like picturesand all these like articles
would come out, like she's analcoholic and she's on drugs and
she's this and she's that, anda lot of the pictures they
(18:06):
showed of her were reallyterrible photos.
Obviously, a lot of them mighthave been photoshopped, yeah.
Then this documentary came outand I was like watch this.
I didn't know that she is in aconservatorship and that she's
literally being so.
It seems that she's being heldhostage by her conservator and
(18:27):
her family Overmedicated.
Yeah, they have her in a memorycare assisted living facility in
New York City.
She's in the window like, helpme, like hi, doing interviews by
phone.
Yep, I saw that TMZ interviewSaving Wendy Williams or
whatever it's called, and I sawanother documentary.
(18:47):
I'm like this poor woman.
If what they say is reallyhappening to her, she is like
being held prisoner.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
Which is kind of
crazy because it's like, how do
you get to that point,especially her, who was always
very vocal, which is kind ofcrazy because it's like, how do
you get to that point,especially her who was always
very vocal?
She's almost like um, like afemale howard stern, like shock
jock type of stuff.
Yeah.
So it's like how does someoneso like bold get put under
control?
Like like, how did that happen?
Speaker 2 (19:18):
so.
So she, oh she, had troubleswith her son for years.
She had troubles with herhusband or ex-husband I'm not
sure if they're still married ornot.
Um, she had a lot of likepersonal issues that she was
always dealing with behind thescenes, even when she had her
wendy williams show.
Um, right, when she left theshow, supposedly she had left
(19:38):
because of, like, her husbandcheated on her or something yeah
, I think he had like a baby orsomething.
It was like all this drama, yeah.
So after watching thedocumentary, apparently what
happened was so she say all thatwas happening she's drinking
too much, she's probably smoking, who knows what she's doing,
but she's letting thingsinterfere.
(19:59):
And now her mind is not straightbecause she's like drinking and
doing all these things Right,so she stopped paying attention
and was like intoxicated all thetime apparently and wasn't
getting out of bed likedepressed like all this shit
because of everything that wasgoing on in her personal life,
(20:21):
crass like all this shit becauseof everything that was going on
in her personal life.
So I guess at some point herson was taking money from her
without her permission somehowwe had access to her money and
wells fargo was where her moneywas all through, like they were
in charge of her money, I guess.
So wells fargo saw that a lot oftransactions were happening at
(20:46):
a time, and big amounts, andlike he was throwing big parties
, like he was doing all thiscrazy shit.
So they reached out to wendyand when she was like, what?
Like apparently, supposedly shehad no idea and they decided to
take control of her money andput a conservatorship on her
account so like that no onecould fuck with her money, no
(21:08):
more.
But she could, but no one elsecould, no one had direct access
to her money.
So I don't know how the kid haddirect access to her money, but
he did.
Yeah, it was her son, so whoprobably knows right, right.
So somehow after that shereally got like messed up on.
She was starting to getmedicated and now she's over
medicated and now, like she fellinto this big depression, she
(21:29):
lost her show, like likeeverything started snowballing
from them from there, and sothey the court, or I don't know
if it's Wells Fargo or the courtappointed her like a guardian
like a conservator to help herkind of get back on track.
And it seems if, whatever thisTMZ and all these news outlets
(21:52):
are saying, it seems as thoughthis guardians actually take,
keep it, using that power tostay in control of her and not
allow her to get access to herlife and her money and get back
to normal.
Because now the guardian issaying like she's got dementia,
she doesn't speak correctly, sheI've heard her do at least five
(22:12):
interviews in the last shetalks fine, you know what she
says, a lot you.
You know what I'm saying.
You know what I'm saying.
You know what I'm saying.
Okay, she's always said that.
But according to the Guardian.
That's not normal for somebodyto say that that many times, so
(22:38):
they're saying like a lot of theway that she speaks is not
normal for people to speak andsay a lot of the words that she
says.
But like it's just crazy.
So now she has a court-orderedconservator, which is not a
family member, it's just aperson that the court put in
charge of her life.
Crazy, finally, like familymembers started to like try to
intervene and step in on this.
And now she has a niece thathired another person to help her
(23:00):
get out of the conservatorshipand apparently she's got a court
date coming up and this, this,that and the other thing so like
she had to get permission a fewmonths ago to go to her
father's birthday party in miamiand at first the court and then
they decided to say yes, afterthe tmz thing came out.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
But even still, I
don't understand why not like
she's not a harm to, she's not aharm to herself, she's not a
harm to others.
She seems capable, like yes,I've seen her in a scooter, but
like she seems fine.
Like just have someone go withher, like be a chaperone, yeah,
like a nurse or something, butlike why her Like a personal
assistant?
That's so.
Why are her like a person?
Speaker 2 (23:38):
weird.
Yeah, this, this shit is crazy.
It just goes to show like, Imean, look at what's happening
to her.
If, in fact, she is of sanemind and body.
There's like a court, a courtof law, in this random stranger
controlling her fucking life andher money that she worked for
right.
And then look at this karenreid thing.
You have this court systemthat's literally dragging this
(24:00):
woman through the fucking mud.
Speaker 1 (24:01):
It's a fucking circus
.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
Because I'm telling
you right now she's not guilty.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
No fucking way.
It is a fucking circus, thisKaren Reid case.
It's ridiculous.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
Now you have
protesters suing the fucking
judge, the state police, thetown of Canton, Like come on.
Speaker 1 (24:18):
Yeah, that whole town
just needs to be shut down,
renamed like re-zoned somethingyep, yep, yep.
Speaker 2 (24:26):
This woman that I
work with has um one of her
colleagues.
She had a meeting with one ofher colleagues and they were
like talking about you knowwhere they're from, or whatever,
and he was like she startedtalking about Karen Reed and he
goes and and she, he looked ather and he's like, yeah, I'm
kind of embarrassed to say thatI even live there because he
lives in kenton.
He's like kind of embarrassedto say that I live there.
(24:47):
Like it's shameful what's goingon there it must be so weird.
Speaker 1 (24:50):
I can't imagine
living there.
I don't know.
It must be like you.
Just you probably can't getaway from it.
People talking about it, themedia, like just all sorts of
things that we're probably noteven aware of happening in that
town.
It's crazy, it's absolutelycrazy.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
And it just again the
justice system.
Look at wendy williams as acelebrity yeah that's being held
literally prisoner for becausesome stranger says that she's
fucking crazy.
Yeah, go have her evaluated.
Go have three people, fourpeople, five people evaluate her
.
Like I don't understand, why isthe justice system allowing
(25:27):
that?
Speaker 1 (25:27):
and why is?
Speaker 2 (25:28):
the justice system,
allowing what's happening right
a couple towns over from us,like seriously, it's just insane
, it's awful, it's awful.
So I want free Wendy Williams.
Speaker 1 (25:42):
On the flip side,
though, can you imagine being
like the random person gettingassigned to her case and being
like I am Wendy Williams,conservator.
Speaker 2 (25:50):
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I wish it was me.
I'd be like her best friend.
I'd be like me and you.
We're going to get that manipedi Right and that's the thing,
right.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
You're either going
to be best friends or you're
going to be polar opposites andyou're going to not like her at
all because she's like cuckoo.
Oh yeah, she's cuckoo likesober and normal.
She's fucking cuckoo, yeah.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
And that's the thing.
That's the problem.
No matter whether she's soberor not, she's kind of cuckoo.
She's not like a normal person.
She has her own.
What is it?
She's very like eccentric.
Is that the right?
Like yes, and they're usingthat against her to say that
she's fucking crazy.
That's so fucked up.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
She's very she's
always been very open and honest
about like her past like drugabuse and alcohol abuse and you
know, thinking that was going tolike help other people and now
it's coming to like bite her inthe ass.
Yeah, yeah, that's a shame.
Speaker 2 (26:48):
So, yeah, I'm like
considering one of these
weekends this summer or spring.
I'm going driving to New York,I'm going to that facility and
I'm going to hold my sign.
I'm gonna, I'm with you, girl,like I want you free, I love you
, I support you.
Here's my phone number Call me.
I'm telling you I'm going to befriends with Wendy Williams by
(27:08):
the end I need this to happen.
We need to make this happen likeI'm going there, she and she.
Her window overlooks thesidewalk, so I can just be like
hey, wendy, I'm right here, girllike I'm, I got you, I'm fine
where she's at oh yeah, it's allover media.
I'll be finding that out, don'tworry, I'll be.
But yeah, I'm gonna see.
(27:31):
I'll go see her.
I'm gonna see Poor woman, Ifeel so bad.
She is a little loony tune, butshe's 100%.
You know that's her, that's herpersonality.
And I was like no, that's wrongwhat they're doing to her.
If she you know what I mean Ifshe's diagnosed from multiple
people, that that's just herpersonality, let this woman be
(27:52):
Like seriously.
Let this woman be likeseriously, let her fucking be
and let's move on yeah, you know, yeah, I think she's normal.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
I think she's just
been through a lot and that
obviously is going to shape whoyou are mentally, emotionally,
and how that presents to otherpeople.
Speaker 2 (28:09):
But she's fucking
normal, the woman is fine I
better be careful, because I'vebeen through a lot too.
And people got out looking atme crazy and trying to put me in
a fucking mental house or afucking elderly home or some
shit.
I better watch out.
I gotta be.
You gotta be careful who yousurround yourself with.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
You know what I mean,
Because it's so funny that you
say that I was going to textsomething and like our family
group chat the other day and Iliterally deleted it and I said
to myself I don't want thatcoming back one day.
I was like, nope, not even inthe safe space will I send that?
(28:46):
Because I've been watching somany documentaries, I've been
listening to so many podcastslike true crime podcasts that
all of this stuff is just likeingrained in my brain right now
that I just I have to be carefulyeah.
Speaker 2 (29:01):
Yeah, you got to be
careful.
You never know.
No, you don't, you don'tBecause people are crazy and
people get these ideas andforget it.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
Yeah, it's awful.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
You're screwed Like
those two.
It's awful.
Free Karen Reed, free WendyWilliams.
That's it.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (29:15):
Let's move.
Let's go freaking.
Prosecute real criminals andreal fucking mentally ill people
.
My God Right, this is Christ.
Anyways, talk about true crime.
I want to do this little thing.
Yeah, called Screen it, or whatdid I say it was?
(29:37):
I forget, I'm a dope.
I may skip it, stream it orskip it.
Stream it or skip it, that'sright yeah I had it here
somewhere and I lost it, sostream it or skip it.
I have one right here, I havetwo, I have gabby petito oh, I'm
skipping it same why are?
you skipping it um a couplereasons.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
One, I feel like we
already know what happened.
Two, I just don't want to giveit any more attention because I
feel like obviously he sucked,but more so than anything, his
parents fucking sucked and I Ithis is gonna be a hot take,
unfortunately, I feel likepeople want to watch things that
(30:23):
don't, that they don't kind ofknow what happened in the end
exactly, exactly, and that's mything yeah I know we know the
whole story, so why?
Speaker 2 (30:32):
am I gonna watch this
documentary and what?
What really pisses me off isthe the footage of like the
police literally have her in theback seat and like they could
have saved her life yeah andthey has they hesitated and let
her go back with that guy andthis is what happened.
I don't understand, like, whythey make doc.
(30:54):
I understand why they makedocuments because it's money,
right but like it's been allover the news all over the world
, like why are we watching adocumentary on it too?
You know what I mean?
It's all the same footage fromthe news reports and everything
yeah and like that.
The next one I'm thinking isthat long island um the serial
killer.
Speaker 1 (31:14):
Oh yeah, hey, you
were obsessed with that a couple
of months ago.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
I was Maybe a year
ago, I don't even remember when
this was.
So I was.
But then it like this, like thestory, ok, so I was obsessed.
They found all these bodies.
Now they, now they werestarting to find bodies that
weren't even connected to him,that had that they didn't feel
like.
Had they just happened to finda couple extra bodies around the
(31:39):
same place where he was digginghis body.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
So crazy.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
So it's like so are
they connected or not?
And then after that I feel likeit died down.
Yeah, I don't care about itanymore.
Speaker 1 (31:50):
Hildigo.
Speaker 2 (31:51):
Was it called Hildigo
long island serial killer,
something like that somethinglike that, yeah, so it's on
netflix, but like it stillhasn't gone to trial, we still
don't know like anything aboutit, but like I've lost interest
in it because it's been so longlike yeah did they just forget
(32:12):
about it now like?
Speaker 1 (32:12):
I don't understand
because like but also to your
point, like I wouldn't watch itif it hasn't gone to trial
because that's still ongoing.
So like, what is it?
For me, this documentary isalmost like watching the news,
like, why do I need to watch thedocumentary?
Speaker 2 (32:26):
there's no ending
right exactly so that's one that
I wouldn't bother.
Speaker 1 (32:31):
No, I think it's too
soon for that.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
Lori Vallow.
Sins of a mother, oh so.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
I've actually seen
that one.
Speaker 2 (32:40):
I have too.
Yeah, I definitely would notskip that one, because for me
she's actually starting anothertrial in Arizona for the charges
against her there.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
Psychopath.
Speaker 2 (32:56):
And the only reason I
I mean there's a lot of reasons
why the story like I couldn'tget away from the story, but
like all this, like cult stuffand how she was married like
five times and how she probablykilled two or three of her
ex-husbands and like it it just.
The story is so freaking insane.
(33:16):
I had to watch it.
I'm like I have to see, I haveto watch it.
And another thing is it tookplace in another state so we
didn't get a lot of newscoverage on it, Right.
So watching it, you know, yeah,I got to, you know, see, really
like the whole story.
So I really I like that.
And I just saw today that todayactually I got a blip that her
(33:40):
trial starting in Arizona.
Speaker 1 (33:42):
Unbelievable.
Speaker 2 (33:43):
I think it was for
the murder of her ex-husband
Fuck you lady.
Speaker 1 (33:48):
It's like so many
bodies under her Like what is
happening.
Speaker 2 (33:52):
She is still claiming
that her and that chad daybell
her, her fifth husband, that'salso in prison yeah they're
gonna be exonerated.
She's she's still saying thatthey're gonna be exonerated.
This lady is cuckoo for cocoa.
Speaker 1 (34:07):
Yeah like, yeah.
How she doesn't see herself asa dark light is beyond me.
Speaker 2 (34:11):
Yeah, big time.
Yeah, yeah, right, yeah,exactly yeah.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
Such a crazy lady.
Speaker 2 (34:18):
Crazy, it's crazy.
So what about?
Speaker 1 (34:21):
Gosh.
Speaker 2 (34:22):
You'll probably kill
me for bringing this one up.
The.
Speaker 1 (34:23):
Menendez.
The Menendez brothers I mean Ithink it's worth watching and I
will say it's because ithappened so long ago.
So I think the story kind oflike died down.
And then all of a sudden itgained more like media
attraction.
(34:44):
So I obviously remember it, butI remember it as a child
Exactly watching it.
As an adult, as a mother, itwas watching it from like a
different perspective yes sothat's one that I would stream I
wouldn't skip that one samesame.
Speaker 2 (35:00):
That's why I watched,
I did watch it and I watched it
because it happened when I wasyounger and I I heard about it.
I, you know, got the gist of it, but I really wanted to like
get all the details and all the,because I don't remember, like
from when that happened to now.
I don't remember, like, fromwhen that happened to now.
I don't remember like.
So I really wanted to like getthe whole story, so that's why I
(35:20):
I would I watch that and Iwould watch it if I hadn't
watched it.
How about, like one that has todo with sports celebrities,
like, say, uh, aaron hernandezstory.
Skip it or stream it.
Speaker 1 (35:34):
Oh, so I watched it
because I didn't know the person
that he unalived, but I knewpeople that knew that person.
So I watched it to kind of likeunderstand that whole situation,
that whole situation, um, alsojust to see how it was going to
(35:59):
be like presented, because Iknew it from like a street sense
, like a real life, like righthere sense.
So I watched it for that reasonand I mean I there was things
in the documentary that I didn'tknow and didn't hear about that
was kind of interesting to me,mostly around like his
upbringing.
So, yeah, I think that I thinkthat one's worth watching.
Speaker 2 (36:20):
I would stream it, so
I would skip it.
And here's why you became, orhave become, a multi-million
dollar football star and in yourpart time you want to go out
and commit crimes and murderpeople like, yeah, I mean,
that's exactly why I?
(36:40):
Would want to watch it tounderstand the why?
No see, I don't, I think he's,just, I mean he's, he's
obviously not with us anymoreyeah I think what he did was
really, really, really, reallysilly, like really.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
Oh 100%.
Speaker 2 (36:56):
Crazy Like you had
your whole world like wrapped up
in a fucking bow and handed toyou.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
Yeah, with the best
team at the best time.
Yes, like the stars aligned forhim.
Speaker 2 (37:09):
And that's what you
chose to do when you're off on
your downtime, twice, I can'twrap my head around that and
that makes me so that infuriatesme when celebrity people do
like all this, like he trainedhis whole life for that.
So like you, train your wholelife for something right you
(37:31):
work every freaking day and bustyour ass to get it.
Speaker 1 (37:34):
You finally get it
and you just fucking throw it
away like what but that's whyit's important to watch the
documentary, because he workedhis whole life to get to where
he was, but his whole life hewas also in similar trouble so
one could say, yes, because hetrained so hard he was on the
path to becoming a Patriotsballplayer.
Speaker 2 (37:58):
But if you look at
the other path that he was on in
his personal life, it's not sofar-fetched that he was going to
do the dumb shit that he didand the two paths crossed and
how it ended for him it's one ofthose nature versus nurture
debates too.
Speaker 1 (38:12):
You could really sink
your teeth into that one.
Yeah, it's creepy.
It ended for him.
Yeah, it's one of those likenature versus nurture debates
too, like you could really kindof sink your teeth into that one
, yeah I can't believe netflixhas so many different genres.
Speaker 2 (38:23):
It's my god.
True, true life documentaries,true crime, dark document, like
what?
Biopics, like there's so many,like so many like holy shit,
there's so many of them it'scrazy.
But as far as those documentarygoes and the, the, the ones
that are based on real life andhave to do with any type of
(38:45):
murder or anything, like thatlike that making of a murderer
that one was really good, thatone was awesome and I definitely
watched that yep againyep because, again, it was very
like it was all over the place.
Until this moment I don't knowwho killed that woman.
I know, and I know that thosetwo people are probably still in
(39:08):
fucking prison yeah, yep, theywere out and they were in.
Speaker 1 (39:11):
Then they were out,
then they were in.
Like what the fuck?
Because, dude, that one wasreally good, because it does
lend insight into, like thejustice system and how like
courts work and like all theseother things that play a big
part into not just the crime,but like what happens afterwards
and in between and what couldhappen after, after, after, yeah
(39:32):
, yeah so I basically like stuffthat it didn't really happen
locally, because locally you seeit on the news, you see it,
yeah you know.
Speaker 2 (39:43):
Then they do like the
karen reed, they made a
documentary about it.
Why it's all news clippings ofeverything we're seeing right
now on the news, like that wasstupid like I saw the first
episode and I'm like what thefuck, I know I'm not watching
this like I don't understandthis.
So I definitely like um onesthat take place where we don't
get so much of the news and thatare actually based on, like you
(40:08):
know, yeah, real life thingsand not celebrity ones, because,
like I said, these celebritiesare just dumb yeah if I work my
ass off and became rich andfamous.
I am not fucking that up.
Yes, no fucking way yep and ifI do, someone needs to just kill
me, because that would just bereally dumb for me to.
Speaker 1 (40:29):
That's a different
documentary.
Two that I would recommend.
I think this one's on HuluScamanda Scamanda is really good
.
That's another one.
Speaker 2 (40:43):
I won't watch why?
Because she faked cancer.
Speaker 1 (40:50):
Like what.
So what was intriguing to me.
So here's the thing when Iwatch a documentary, I watch it
for two reasons.
One how can people be so stupid?
That's one of the reasons Iwon't watch it.
Two how can rich people be sostupid?
Speaker 2 (41:08):
Yeah, Three, where
the fuck are these people
getting their money from?
I?
Speaker 1 (41:15):
can't.
Speaker 2 (41:17):
I can't watch
anything like that either.
Like, yeah, faked cancer.
And now you have a fuckingdocumentary like like my thing
is like you're out there in theworld as amanda whatever your
name is everybody knows you.
Everywhere you go, people knowyou're that shit bag that conned
hundreds of people, thousandsof people yeah, made them think
you had cancer.
Like you're known to be a pieceof shit for the rest of your
(41:39):
life and you have a document toprove it.
Speaker 1 (41:41):
That she went to is
insane.
Yeah, no I won't watch thoseeither, yeah if you're not
familiar, I highly recommend umanother one which is on netflix
no, no, no, no.
Which is another, like scammyone.
I love scams, con mom, con momon netflix is I haven't seen
(42:02):
that one yeah, it's good.
So what caught my attentionobviously was the title and like
I have a crazy mom, had a crazymom, I have a crazy grandmother
.
So I was like, oh, this isright up my fucking alley.
It's almost like a competition,like, oh, she's a con, let's
see.
Speaker 2 (42:20):
Let's see what she's
got on us wait, am I gonna be
triggered by this fuckingdocumentary or no?
Yeah, I guess it depends on thecircumstances, right?
I know?
Speaker 1 (42:34):
I know, yeah, oh my
god so this one's really good
and it like tugs at yourheartstrings a little bit
because, like you know, you feelbad for the people that got
fucked out of the whatever youknow they've got.
But yeah, con mom, on netflixis a wild ride I'll have to look
at that one for sure.
Yeah, it's really kind of crazy.
Speaker 2 (42:53):
Lots of questions I
lord, let's see.
No, not dark crime, true crimeand crime on netflix.
People, you get your pick.
So, with that being said, timeto go, time to go girl.
Speaker 1 (43:11):
All right, fine with
me.
It's wednesday.
I'm gonna watch survivorawesome.
Speaker 2 (43:15):
I don't watch that
either.
Oh, so good the season is sogood.
Speaker 1 (43:18):
If anyone Time to go,
girl, all right, fine with me.
It's Wednesday.
I'm going to watch Survivor.
Awesome, I don't watch thateither.
So good, this season is so goodIf anyone is watching this
season of Survivor DM me.
Speaker 2 (43:24):
I have a lot of
thoughts.
I'll say skip it.
Speaker 1 (43:29):
You're rude.
Thanks everyone for listening.
Peace Cheers, bye.
Speaker 2 (43:39):
Thank you for joining
us on this wine build adventure
.
We would greatly appreciateyour support.
Please follow and rate ourpodcast on apple podcast,
spotify or wherever you'retuning in right now.
Speaker 1 (43:46):
So raise a glass,
leave no wine behind and let's
continue this journey together.
Cheers.